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Rohingya: A Trail of Misfortune

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Rohingya people alight from a boat as they arrive at Shahparir Dip in Teknaf, Bangladesh. Credit: IPS
COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh, Sep 18 2017 (IPS) - Forsaken and driven out by their home country Myanmar, tens of thousands of Rohingyas are struggling to survive in Bangladesh’s border districts amid scarcities of food, clean water and medical care, mostly for children and elderly people.
In a desperate flight to escape brutal military persecution, men, women and children in the thousands have walked for miles, travelled on rickety fishing boats or waded through the Naf — the river that divides Bangladesh and Myanmar.
“It was a nightmare…the crackle of bullets and burning flames still haunt me.” -- Rebeka Begum
“I saw my houses being burned down and left behind all our belongings… my father was killed in front of us,” 12-year-old Nurul Islam told IPS as he reached Teknaf border in Bangladesh on Sep. 13. “In a bid to escape along with my mother and a younger brother, we walked almost a week to reach Bangladesh following a trail of people streaming out of Rakhine villages for cover.”
Islam is one of over 400,000 Rohingyas who have made the defiant and arduous journey to neighbouring Bangladesh in the past three weeks. Many of them were shot dead, drowned in the river or blown up in landmines placed in their path of escape.
Yet every hour, the number of new arrivals is rising. There seems no end to the steady flow of Rohingyas carrying sacks of belongings – whatever they could save from burning – or children on their shoulders or laps, or carrying weaker elderly people on their back or bamboo yokes. As they arrived, they were devastated, but happy to find themselves still alive – at least for the time being.

Rohingya children wait after arriving to Shahparir Dip in Teknaf, Bangladesh. Credit: IPS

But aid groups, both local and international, warn that this already overpopulated, impoverished South Asian nation is now overwhelmed by the sudden influx of refugees.
They said lack of food and medical aid are leading to a humanitarian catastrophe as starving or half-fed people arrive already suffering from malnutrition, and an inadequate safe water supply and poor sanitation facilities could cause breakouts of waterborne diseases.
“We’ve already detected many cases of skin or diarrhoeal diseases,” Ibrahim Molla, a physician from Dhaka Community Hospital now aiding refugees in Cox’s Bazar, told IPS.
The UN refugee agency UNHCR and International Organization for Migration (IOM) held a joint press conference in Dhaka on Thursday where officials estimated the number of fleeing Rohingyas might reach one million as their influx continued.
The latest round of Rohingya crisis unfolded as Myanmar’s army conducted a brutal crackdown on “Rohingya militants” who attacked a security outpost killing solders in the last week of August. Though not independently verified, according to eyewitness accounts of fleeing Rohingyas, the Myanmar army torched village after village, the homes of ethnic Rohingya Muslims, in reprisal, killing hundreds.
Myanmar authorities denied the allegations, but satellite images released by a number of international rights groups corroborated the claim made by the Rohingya refugees.
In addition to arson, the Myanmar soldiers were also accused of raping Rohingya women.
Local people in Teknaf also said they saw huge fires and black smoke billowing across the Naf River from the Myanmar side several times.
The UN refugee chief called the situation a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” in Rakhine state in Myanmar.
It was not the first time the Rohingyas, mostly Muslims, have been targeted and faced discrimination in their hometowns of Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they lived for centuries. In the past few decades, they have been stripped of citizenship, denied basic rights and made stateless, leading the UN to describe them as “the most persecuted people on earth”.
As the Rohingyas crossed finally the border after their death-defying trudge to Bangladesh’s southeast districts of Cox’s Bazar and Bandarban, many had no safe shelter, food or drinking water in a country of 160 million people, though Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina promised to accommodate all on humanitarian grounds.
Though many countries started sending aid and others made promises, many Rohingya refugees were still starving or passing days half-fed. Those who were strong enough to jostle fared the best as local volunteers distributed limited amounts of food and water.
In many places when trucks carrying aid were spotted, starving people blocked them and desperately tried to grab food. The distribution process turned risky as the inexperienced volunteers threw food to the crowd of refugees from the trucks.
As they scuffled for food and water, many people were injured in stampedes or caned by the people given responsibility to discipline the refugees crowding for aid.
Thousands of Rohingyas, mostly women and children, took refuge on the sides of roads or other empty spaces under open sky. Some of those who were lucky could manage a sheet of polythene to save them from heavy monsoon rains that flooded a third of Bangladesh in August.
The Bangladesh government has already demarcated an area in Cox’s Bazar to build new refugee camps and started mandatory registration of Rohingyas before giving them official status as refugees.
Rebeka Begum, who had just alighted from a boat, was searching fruitlessly for food for her child. “We’re now paupers as we’ve left behind everything in Myanmar to save ourselves from the wrath of military,” she said, horror still sounding in her voice.

A Rohingya woman Rebeka Begum with her child poses for a photo at Shahparir Dip, Teknaf, Bangladesh. Credit: IPS

“It was a nightmare…the crackle of bullets and burning flames still haunt me,” Rebeka Begum said.
Amena Begum was collecting filthy water from a canal for her children to drink as she found no other options. “I urgently need water for my children… what can I do now?” she asked.
Local people said that since there were not enough toilets for so many people, thousands of refugees were defecating on the roadsides or on the banks of canals, from which they were also collecting water for drinking and other purposes.
UNICEF said over 200,000 Rohingya children were at risk and hundreds of unaccompanied Rohingya children, separated from both parents and relatives in the ongoing violence in Rakhine, were in Cox’s Bazar and looking for family members. Many of these children are traumatised by terrifying memories of murders and arson in homes and their experience on path while fleeing.
Save the Children in Bangladesh said in a statement on Sept 17 that a shortage of food, shelter, water and basic hygiene support might cause another catastrophe.
“Apart from diarrhoea and skin diseases, different types of communicable diseases might spread fast here,” warned Dr. Ibrahim Molla, adding that the shortage of space the refugees had for living and poor hygiene support was to blame.
Molla said the group was running a medical camp in Teknaf, and had obtained government permission to open a makeshift hospital for the refugees.
All local hospitals in Cox’s Bazar and the port city of Chittagong were teeming with Rohingya patients – many with bullet wounds and some with injuries from landmines.
Mohammad Alam was looking for medical support for his feverish son as he arrived on a boat crossing the Naf. He was advised by local people to walk a few kilometres more to find a hospital.
Alam, a farmer by profession, started off again in search of the hospital and a refugee camp.
“I’m lucky, as I’ve survived along with all my family members,” Amam said. But his pale and weary face denoted a grim and uncertain future, like his fellow Rohingyas who had no idea when or if they would ever be able to return home despite the global pressure on Myanmar to bring an end to Rohingyas’ persecution.

Commonwealth commends Bangladesh response to Rohingya refugees

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DHAKA, Sept 17, 2017 (BSS) - Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland has commended Bangladesh government for setting aside land to receive hundreds of thousands of refugees from neighbouring Myanmar.

"I am encouraged that Bangladesh has opened its borders to receive those who have felt they had no choice but to leave their homes," she said in a statement on Saturday.

She said the refugees are Rohingya Muslims who say they are fleeing persecution and violence at the hands of Myanmar's Buddhist majority and government forces.

Secretary-General Scotland said this is a major humanitarian crisis, and reports indicate that the majority fleeing are women and children. 

"By providing immediate assistance - food, shelter and clothing - to hundreds of thousands of desperate people in this time of great need, the government and people of Bangladesh are acting with characteristic Commonwealth goodwill, and in accordance with our Commonwealth Charter," she added.

भारत 2028 तक बन जाएगा विश्व की तीसरी बड़ी अर्थव्यवस्था: एचएसबीसी

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मुंबई, 17 सितंबर (भाषा) भारत अगले दस साल में जापान और जर्मनी को पछाड़कर विश्व की तीसरी सबसे बड़ी अर्थव्यवस्था बन जाएगा लेकिन इसके लिए सतत सुधार तथा सामाजिक क्षेत्र पर ध्यान देने की जरूरत होगी। ब्रिटेन के बैंक एचएसबीसी ने यह उम्मीद जतायी।

एचएसबीसी ने कहा कि भारत में सामाजिक पूंजी अपर्याप्त है और स्वास्थ्य एवं शिक्षा जैसी चीजों पर खर्च न सिर्फ देश हित में है बल्कि आर्थिक वृद्धि और राजनीतिक स्थिरता के लिए भी जरूरी है। भारत को कारोबार आसान करने और इससे संबंधित पहलुओं पर भी काफी ध्यान देने की जरूरत है।

एचएसबीसी के अर्थशास्त्री ने कहा, ‘‘अगले दस साल में भारत डॉलर के सांकेतिक आधार पर जर्मनी और जापान को पीछे छोड़ विश्व की तीसरी सबसे बड़ी अर्थव्यवस्था बन जाएगा। खरीद क्षमता के आधार पर यह और पहले हो जाएगा।’’ बैंक ने आबादी और वृहद स्थिरता को देश की मुख्य ताकत बताया। उसके अनुमान के अनुसार, भारत 2028 तक सात हजार अरब डॉलर की अर्थव्यवस्था बन जाएगा। यह छह हजार अरब डॉलर के जर्मनी और पांच हजार अरब डॉलर के जापान की तुलना में अधिक होगा। वित्त वर्ष 2016-17 में भारत 2300 अरब डॉलर की अर्थव्यवस्था रहा है और विश्व में यह पांचवें स्थान पर काबिज है।

एचएसबीसी ने कहा कि वित्त वर्ष 2017-18 में आर्थिक वृद्धि की दर माल एवं सेवा कर (जीएसटी) के कारण वित्त वर्ष 2016-17 के 7.1 प्रतिशत की तुलना में नीचे रहेगा। इसमें अगले साल से सतत तरीके से सुधार होता जाएगा। उसने सुधार की प्रक्रिया बंद होने को भी नुकसानदेह बताया। उसने कहा, ‘‘सुधारों के दायरे में संकुचित हो जाने की आशंका है। भारत को लगातार बदलाव की पारिस्थितिकी तैयार करने की जरूरत है।’’ जीएसटी का जिक्र करते हुए बैंक ने कहा कि भारत में असंगठित उद्यम काफी संख्या में रोजगार के अवसर मुहैया कराते हैं। वे कर की ऊंची दर की प्रतिक्रिया में कारखाने बंद या लोगों की छंटनी कर सकते हैं। रोजगार के अवसरों के बिना वृद्धि की चिंताओं के प्रति बैंक ने कहा कि देश में ई-कॉमर्स सेक्टर अगले दशक तक 1.2 करोड़ अवसरें मुहैया कराएगा जो कि कुल 2.4 करोड़ गिरावट का आधा होगा। उसने कहा कि रोजगार के अवसरों के सृजन का एक अन्य मुख्य क्षेत्र सामाजिक क्षेत्र हो सकता है। इसमें स्वास्थ्य एवं शिक्षा जैसे मोर्चों पर काफी काम किये जाने की जरूरत है।

बैंक ने कहा कि भारत सेवा क्षेत्र आधारित अर्थव्यवस्था बना रहेगा लेकिन इसे विनिर्माण और कृषि क्षेत्र पर भी अधिक ध्यान देने की जरूरत है। उसने आगे कहा कि भारत की कहानी निर्यात आधारित चीन से अलग होगी। 55 करोड़ से अधिक उपभोक्ताओं का घरेलू उपभोग इसमें महत्वपूर्ण कारक होगा।

Moon, Trump agree to thoroughly implement U.N. sanctions on N. Korea

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(ATTN: UPDATES with more details, additional information from 4th para; ADDS photo)
SEOUL, Sept. 17 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Moon Jae-in and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to more thoroughly implement U.N. sanctions against North Korea during telephone talks Sunday.
The leaders also called on the North to refrain from any more provocations, warning they will only lead to its isolation and eventual collapse, according to Park Soo-hyun, spokesman for South Korea's presidential office Cheong Wa Dae.
"The two leaders agreed to further strengthen the close cooperation between South Korea and the United States, and put more practical pressure on North Korea based on their cooperation to make North Korea realize it will only become more isolated diplomatically and face additional economic pressure if it continues to make provocations and eventually enter the path of collapse," Park said of the telephone conversation between Moon and Trump held earlier in the day.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in talks to his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump in a telephone conversation held at his presidential office Cheong Wa Dae in Seoul on Sept. 17, 2017. (Photo courtesy of Cheong Wa Dae)South Korean President Moon Jae-in talks to his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump in a telephone conversation held at his presidential office Cheong Wa Dae in Seoul on Sept. 17, 2017. (Photo courtesy of Cheong Wa Dae)
The telephone conversation, the second of its kind since the start of the month, followed the North's launch of what appeared to be an intermediate range ballistic missile that flew over Japan on Friday.
Their first phone conversation this month was made shortly after the communist state staged its sixth nuclear test on Sept. 3.
Moon and Trump agreed it was important to thoroughly implement U.N. Security Council resolutions against Pyongyang, including the latest sanctions resolution unanimously adopted at the start of last week to punish the North for its latest nuclear provocation.
"The leaders shared the importance of implementing the U.N. Security Council resolution under close cooperation with the international community and agreed to continue their discussions on the issue," the Cheong Wa Dae spokesman said.
The South Korean leader underscored the importance of enhancing South Korea's own defense capabilities, along with those of the joint forces of South Korea and the United States.
Trump reiterated his full support for the Korea-U.S. alliance and said he would continue to provide any assistance and support necessary to further strengthen the alliance, Park said.
They agreed to continue their discussions when they meet in New York for the U.N. General Assembly later this week, according to the spokesman.
Cheong Wa Dae officials earlier said Moon and Trump will be joined by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in New York for a three-way summit.
They said the South Korean and U.S. leaders were also expected to hold a bilateral summit.

Russian, Belarusian pilots drill skills of using aviation of common air defense system

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MINSK, September 17. /TASS/. Russia’s and Belarus’ military aircraft drilled the skills of interaction within the common air defense system during the Zapad-2017 (West-2017) military exercises, Belarusian Defense Ministry Spokesman Vladimir Makarov said on Sunday.
"The Russian and Belarusian military drilled the skills of using aviation, i.e. aviation of the Belarusian-Russian common regional air defense system, to hit the maneuver enemy," he said.
Thus, Belarusian Yak-130 planes and Russian Su-34 planes delivered a strike on the maneuver enemy by dropping bombs and firing non-guided missiles at the Domanovo firing range in Belarus. Apart from that, the Osa missile systems were used to hit targets imitating low-altitude air targets.
"Crews of Russian and Belarusian helicopters on Sunday drilled the skills of preventing state border trespassing in the airspace, destroying missile-defense systems of the maneuver enemy, as well as delivering an airstrike on the positions of the maneuver enemy," Makarov said.
A large-scale exercise Zapad-2017 began in Russia and Belarus on September 14. The drills are held at three proving grounds in Russia and six in Belarus involving 12,700 troops (7,200 Belarussian and 5,500 Russian), about 70 warplanes and helicopters, up to 680 ground vehicles, including about 250 tanks, 200 artillery pieces, multiple rocket launchers and mortars and ten warships.
The main purpose of the exercise is to improve the compatibility of command and control centers, test new documentation and let commanders of all levels practice planning and control of operations on the basis of experience gained in the latest military conflicts.
The exercise will last till September 20.


More:
http://tass.com/world/966058

Four female U.S. tourists attacked with acid in France

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Four female U.S. tourists were attacked with acid in the main train station in Marseille, France. File photo by Wikimedia Commons/Marsielle St. Charles station
Sept. 17 (UPI) -- A woman was arrested Sunday after four female U.S. tourists were attacked with acid in the main train station in Marseille, France.
Shortly after 11 a.m. at the St. Charles station, an unidentified 41-year-old woman sprayed the women, all 20 or 21, with hydrochloric acid, the French newspaper La Provence reported.
Two of the tourists, who were traveling between Marseille and Paris, were hit in the face and the other two also were hospitalized with shock.
The woman was arrested and detained by the police minutes after the attack, a police spokeswoman said. Police said the woman is believed to be psychologically disturbed and she did not know the victims.
The acid reportedly was in a spray canister generally used for cleaning.
"It was a horrific scene," a witness, who declined to be named, told The Telegraph. "The Americans were screaming and people started rushing about. No one knew what was happening and these days everyone is on edge because of terrorism."
Last month, a woman was killed in Marseille when a man deliberately drove a vehicle into two bus stops. Police said the attack was not terror-related.

German liberals draw red line for Merkel on euro zone budget

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BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany’s Free Democrats (FDP) on Sunday ruled out joining a post-election coalition with Chancellor Angela Merkel if she supported French plans to deepen fiscal integration in the euro zone.
Germany goes to the polls next Sunday, when Merkel looks almost certain to be elected to a fourth term in office, though her conservatives will not win enough votes to govern alone.
The socially liberal FDP have long been seen as her natural allies and were junior partners in her second government from 2009 to 2013. They crashed out of parliament that year but are hoping to re-enter the legislature on Sept. 24 as the third-largest party.
”The toughest question is setting the agenda for the future of Europe,“ FDP leader Christian Lindner told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper. ”I fear that Ms Merkel has already agreed to new funding mechanisms (for the EU) with (French President Emmanuel) Macron.
“Everything that goes in the direction of financial transfer on the European level, be it a euro zone budget or a banking union, is a red line for us”.
Macron, who is to is present his views on the future of the euro zone on Sept. 26, has called for a finance minister and a standalone budget for the bloc, while European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday urged EU governments to use economic recovery as a springboard towards closer union.
Merkel has said she would work with Macron on strengthening the euro zone. But Germany remains insistent that member states should take primary responsibility for their own economic problems.
The leader of Germany's Free Democrats (FDP) Christian Lindner speaks at the FDP party convention in Berlin, Germany, September 17, 2017. REUTERS/Axel Schmidt
The FDP have reinvented themselves under Lindner, who preaches a hard line on Europe.
They are polling 8 to 10 percent in surveys, while Merkel’s conservatives are on around 37 percent, leaving their combined forces just short of a majority.
Slideshow (6 Images)
Analysts say completing a banking union and creating a euro zone budget would provide more stability for the currency bloc, and that a conservative/FDP coalition might threaten such plans.
“I fear there could be a strong reaction on bond markets should the FDP push for a literal enforcement of fiscal rules or for an expulsion of Greece as part of a future ruling coalition,” said Martin Lueck of asset manager BlackRock.
A grand coalition with the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), Merkel’s current partners and polling around 23 percent, would make it much easier for the chancellor to work with Macron on overhauling the euro zone.
The center-left SPD have often criticized Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble’s tough stance on Greece and have even backed the idea of common euro zone debt.
The FDP are fighting for third spot against the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD), which is forecast to enter parliament for the first time.
Writing by Joseph Nasr; editing by John Stonestreet

Ultra-Orthodox protesters arrested in violent clash in Jerusalem

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JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Jewish ultra-Orthodox demonstrators protesting the arrest of a prospective army conscript from their community clashed with police in Jerusalem on Sunday and eight men were detained, police said.
Police used a water canon and mounted officers dispersed the protest that briefly turned violent near Jerusalem’s military recruiting office which lies on the edge of one of the city’s ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods.
Although most ultra-Orthodox seminary students gain exemption from military service on religious grounds, they must obtain their exemption through a conscription procedure. Police said the protest was prompted by the man’s arrest after he refused to turn up for recruitment.
Last week Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that parts of the conscription law that exempt seminary students were unconstitutional and gave the government a year to resolve the matter.
Most Jewish Israelis, men and women, are called up for military service when they turn 18.
Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said protesters blocked streets and threw stones at police officers. Video footage showed officers kicking, punching and pushing some demonstrators and a few were dragged across a street.

Japan's PM Abe considers snap election as early as October

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TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is considering calling a snap election for as early as next month to take advantage of his improved approval ratings and disarray in the main opposition party, government and ruling party sources said on Sunday.
Abe’s ratings have recovered to 50 percent in some polls, helped by public jitters over North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests and chaos in the opposition Democratic Party, which has been struggling with single-digit support and defections.
Abe told executives of his Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner, the Komeito party, that he might dissolve parliament’s lower house for a snap poll after the legislature convenes for an extra session from Sept. 28, the sources said.
Top LDP and Komeito officials will meet on Monday to discuss preparations, they added.
“Until now, it appeared the election would be next autumn, but ... we must always be ready for battle,” domestic media quoted Komeito party chief Natsuo Yamaguchi as telling reporters on Saturday during a visit to Russia.
One option is to hold a snap election on Oct. 22, when three by-elections are scheduled, the sources said. Other possibilities are later in October or after an expected visit by U.S. President Donald Trump in early November.
Abe will probably make a decision after returning from a Sept. 18-22 trip to the United States, the sources said.
Abe’s ratings had sunk below 30 percent in some surveys in July, battered by suspected cronyism scandals and a perception that he had grown arrogant after more than four years in office.
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe address Japan Self-Defense Force's senior members during a meeting at the Defense Ministry in Tokyo, Japan, September 11, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
His popularity rebounded somewhat after a cabinet reshuffle in early August and has since been helped by worries over a volatile North Korea, which on Friday fired a ballistic missile over Japan, its second such move in less than a month.
“If we have a snap election now, we need to explain it to the public, including how we will cope with the threat from North Korea,” Koichi Hagiuda, a senior LDP executive, told NHK.
Given that there is no need for a general election until late 2018, a snap poll could prompt criticism of Abe for creating a political vacuum at a time of rising tensions over regional security.
However, an early vote would not only take advantage of Democratic Party disarray but could also dilute a challenge from an embryonic party that allies of popular Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, an ex-LDP lawmaker, are trying to form.
Abe’s coalition would be likely to lose its two-thirds “super majority” in the lower house but keep a simple majority, political sources have said.
Loss of the two-thirds grip could dim prospects of Abe achieving his goal of revising Japan’s pacifist constitution to clarify the military’s role, though members of a new conservative party linked to Koike might back the change.
Any constitutional amendment requires approval by two thirds of both chambers and a majority in a public referendum.
That risk could make Abe hesitate.
“I am skeptical about the consensus that Abe will call a snap election because doing so poses a risk, albeit small, to his agenda of constitutional revision,” said Jeffrey Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University Japan.
Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and David Goodman

UK foreign minister criticized for resurrecting 'Brexit benefit' mantra

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LONDON (Reuters) - Foreign minister Boris Johnson was accused by a government statisticians of misusing state data after he repeated a pro-Leave campaign mantra that Britain would have an extra 350 million pounds a week after Brexit.
The figure had been a central part of the campaign’s “let’s take back control” message, with suggestions that the money could instead be used to fund state healthcare.
Johnson was one of the few prominent members of the campaign not to abandon the pledge after it won the summer 2016 referendum on EU membership.
David Norgrove, of the UK Statistics Authority, said he was “surprised and disappointed” that Johnson was still quoting a figure that confused gross and net contributions.
“It is a clear misuse of official statistics,” Norgrove said in a letter to the minister on Sunday.
He said the number quoted did not include the rebate that Britain receives from the EU, nor did it include payments from Brussels to support, for example, agriculture and scientific research.
Johnson, whose carefully tussled blonde hair and apparent bumbling manner has made him one of Britain’s most recognizable politicians, mentioned the figure again in a Saturday newspaper article that laid out his vision for post-Brexit Britain.
“Once we have settled our accounts, we will take back control of roughly 350 million pounds ($476 million) a week,” he wrote.
“It would be a fine thing, as many of us have pointed out, if a lot of that money went on the NHS (National Health Service).”
Johnson later added he was “surprised and disappointed” by Norgrove’s letter, which he said “was based on what appeared to be a wilful distortion of the text of my article”, according to the BBC.
Britain had no control of EU spending in Britain or of a rebate that was part of a funding arrangement agreed with other EU states, Johnson said.
Figures published by the Office for National Statistics in April 2016 showed Britain’s weekly net contribution to the EU to be about 190 million pounds a week.
editing by John Stonestreet

German art exhibition opens in Beijing

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BEIJING, Sept. 17 (Xinhua) -- Art lovers in Beijing are able to take a close look at the diverse works of 55 contemporary German artists as a large exhibition opened at the Imperial Ancestral Temple art gallery on Sunday.
In celebration of the 45th anniversary of diplomatic ties between China and Germany, the "Deutschland 8 -- German Art in China" exhibition at seven different venues, displays nearly 320 works of German artists since the 1950s in painting, sculpture, photography and others.
The exhibition, which will last until October, is sponsored by China's Central Academy of Fine Arts and the Foundation for Art and Culture in Germany.
"The exhibition opens a new chapter and an innovative path for cross-cultural exchange between China and Germany, and between China and Europe," said Fan Di'an, president of the Chinese art academy.
According to Walter Smerling, chairman of the German foundation, the preparation for the exhibition took nearly two years and the masterpieces on display were collected from a number of German museums, galleries and individuals.
A forum will be held for Chinese and German scholars and artists to discuss contemporary art development.
The Germany art show is in response to the successful exhibition, "China 8 -- Contemporary Art from China," which was held in eight German cities and nine museums in 2015.

World Bank stresses on transparent fiscal architecture in federal Nepal

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KATHMANDU, Sept. 17 (Xinhua) -- As Nepal is adopting a federal system of government, closer attention to sequencing political, financial and administrative decentralization will be important, the World Bank said here on Sunday in its latest "Nepal Development Update."
The World Bank said in a statement that a large proportion of federal spending is expected to be passed on to subnational governments, ultimately increasing public spending from fiscal year 2018.
However, the Update cautioned that unresolved issues surrounding the implementation of the new federal architecture could challenge budget execution, particularly during the upcoming year.
"Nepal's new fiscal federalism system suggests a marked asymmetry between stronger decentralization of spending responsibilities and relatively unchanged low decentralization of tax collection powers," the statement read.
Takuya Kamata, the World Bank's country manager for Nepal said that the subnational governments will play an increasingly critical role in Nepal's public expenditures.
"A system of fiscal transfers that is designed for transparency and predictability and supported by a small set of simple rules, could go a long way in helping meet the development objectives of federal Nepal," the statement quoted Kamata as saying.
Meanwhile, in its semi-annual assessment of economic performance, the Update noted that economic activity in Nepal has been highly impacted by severe floods affecting over a third of the country.
"Economic growth is expected to be lower than earlier forecast and is expected to average 4.5 percent over the next two fiscal years," the statement said.
Over 80 percent of land in the southern Terai, the country's food basket, was affected in the August floods that killed over 100 people and displaced thousands of families.

UK lowers its national threat level to "severe"

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LONDON (AP) — The Latest on the bombing attack on a London subway train (all times local): 3:15 p.m. British officials have lowered the country's official terrorist threat level from "critical" to "severe" following the arrest of a second man in the London subway bombing.


Home Secretary Amber Rudd said Sunday that this is an indication that "good progress" is being made into the investigation of the Friday attack on a London subway train that injured 30 people. She cautioned that it is still an ongoing investigation.
The "severe" threat level now in place means officials believe another attack is highly likely. When it was set at "critical," that meant authorities judged an attack to be imminent. The threat level is set by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Center.
2:15 p.m.
Britain's National Health Service says all but one of the people wounded in the subway bombing attack have been released from the hospital.
The health service said Sunday that one person is still being treated at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, which has a special unit for treating burns.
Officials raised the total number of people injured Friday by the partial detonation of a bomb on the subway train and the stampede that followed to 30. That includes 19 people taken from the explosion site to hospitals and 11 others who came in for treatment on their own.
Many of the injuries were reported to be burns.
1:45 p.m.
British police are searching a home in the London suburb of Stanwell linked to the arrest of the second suspect in the subway bombing.
Police said Sunday the search is connected to the arrest late Saturday of a 21-year-old man taken into custody under the Terrorism Act. He is the second man arrested on suspicion of being involved in Friday's attack on a London subway train that injured 30 people.
Stanwell is about 15 miles (25 kilometers) southwest of central London, heading toward Heathrow Airport.
Police had earlier searched a house in Sunbury believed to be linked to the first suspect, who was arrested at the Dover ferry port.
11:50 a.m.
The property being searched by counter-terrorism police investigating the London subway bombing belongs to an elderly couple who have for years taken in foster children.
Ronald Jones, 88, and his wife Penelope Jones, 71, have been honored by Queen Elizabeth II for their work with children in need of a stable home.
They are reported to be staying with friends while the search continued Sunday in the suburban town of Sunbury southwest of London. Police have not provided details about the extensive search, which began two hours after an 18-year-old suspect in the subway bombing was arrested at Dover's ferry port.
A friend, Alison Griffiths, said they are "great pillars of the community" who have taken in several hundred children in the last 40 years.
The entire neighborhood around their house was evacuated as a precaution when the search began Saturday. Residents were allowed to return home Sunday but the Jones' house remains cordoned off.
11:15 a.m.
A senior British minister has renewed criticism of U.S. President Donald Trump for tweeting about the police inquiry into the bombing of a subway train in London.
First Secretary of State Damian Green told Sky New on Sunday that it was "unhelpful" for Trump to have tweeted about the police investigation. The president tweeted hours after the attack Friday that U.K. police had had the perpetrators in their sights.
Green says "I would urge anyone from the president of the United States on downwards not to tweet" about activities during an active police terror investigation.
He stressed that intelligence cooperation between the United States and Britain is continuing and helps makes the British people safer.
8:35 a.m.
London police say a second man has been arrested in connection with the London subway attack.
Police said Sunday that a 21-year-old man was arrested late Saturday in Hounslow in west London under the Terrorism Act. He is being questioned at a south London police station but has not been charged or identified.
Two men are now in custody for possible roles in the bombing attack on a rush-hour subway train Friday that injured 29 people in London. An 18-year-old man was arrested Saturday in Dover, where ferries leave for France.
The two arrests indicate authorities believe the attack at the Parsons Green station was part of a coordinated plot, not the act of a single person.
Britain's terror threat level remains at "critical" — the highest level — meaning that authorities believe another attack is imminent.

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